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Current thumbnail: Myoclonic status comprises drowsiness more often than loss
of consciousness together with distal erratic and nearly continuous myoclonic
jerks. The EEG shows high amplitude slow waves and a few spikes that are erratic
and have no correlation with the jerks. Tonic seizures may occur. This condition
begins insidiously and may last from a few days to several months. It is particularly
difficult to treat. The patients are left with major cognitive deterioration.
It may complicate Dravet syndrome, myoclonic-astatic epilepsy or symptomatic
epilepsy. In infancy, Angelmann syndrome and 4p- are the major causes.
Historical Note and Nomenclature
Status epilepticus is a condition in which epileptic seizures are prolonged
or repeated at a high frequency to produce a lasting epileptic condition
with disorders of consciousness as a nearly constant component. There are
many types of status epilepticus. The term myoclonic status designates a
prolonged condition in which a patient is affected by nearly continuous myoclonic
jerks. It is often considered to be one of the various types of status epilepticus,
not a specific condition (Treiman 1995).
Myoclonic status was recognized in
acute conditions such as postanoxic coma (Jumao-as and Brenner 1990).
In progressive myoclonus due to inborn error of metabolism, particularly Jansky-Bielschowsky
disease and Unverricht-Lundborg disease, this condition is usual in the
late stages of the disorder. These conditions are viewed as symptomatic myoclonic
status.
In epilepsy, myoclonic status was initially reported as minor
epileptic status (Brett 1966), thus recalling the classical triad of minor
motor seizures. Following his usual pathophysiological classification, Gastaut
introduced the distinction between primary and secondary myoclonic
status (Gastaut 1983), a distinction relating to the concept of primary versus
secondary generalized epilepsy (Merlis 1970). However, in so-called
primary cases due to idiopathic generalized epilepsy, in which jerks are symmetrical
and synchronous, the consciousness is not affected; therefore, the
term "status" is
questionable. In so-called secondary myoclonic status due to symptomatic
generalized epilepsy in which jerks are predominantly asymmetrical and
asynchronous, the consciousness is severely affected; this condition
may last for weeks, months, or even years with persistent deterioration
of mental functions, making this a variant of “epileptogenic
encephalopathy.” This is the condition we will focus on here.
A distinct condition with negative myoclonic status has been reported,
in which a sudden drop is due to loss of tone, but there is no jerk (Gambardella
et al 1997); this condition may also persist for days or months. Clinical Manifestations
In so-called secondary myoclonic status, nearly continuous myoclonic jerks
are mainly asymmetrical and asynchronous, but they are occasionally symmetrical
and synchronous. The EEG shows continuous spike and slow wave activity and
an absence of physiologic activities that last for several days or months.
Usually, the condition begins insidiously in the course of generalized epilepsy
with myoclonic and absence components. Parents notice progressive deterioration
of consciousness; the child drools and becomes more and more ataxic. EEG
shows continuous erratic spikes-and-slow-wave or bursts of generalized spike
and activity intermingled with multifocal spikes, occasionally resulting
in spike-wave complexes. The course may be fluctuating, particularly in cases
complicating epilepsy and as a consequence of medication.
Children affected
by myoclonic status usually have myoclonic-astatic epilepsy (Doose et
al 1970). Myoclonic status occurs 1 month to 60 months after the first epileptic
seizure (Kaminska et al 1999). The myoclonic activity is often mixed
with tonic seizures. The episode may last for a few weeks, be controlled, and
then recur a few months later, with 1 episode to 20 such episodes for
a given patient. In unfavorable cases, the full duration of myoclonic status,
which ranges from 1 month to 90 months, contributes to the poor outcome.
In contrast, shorter episodes may affect patients who later recover completely
(Dulac et al 1990). In Dravet syndrome, myoclonic status used to be a frequent
complication (Dravet et al 1992). It began between 4 years and 6 years of
age and could last several days or weeks before the patient returned to the
previous condition.
Myoclonic status may also be observed in infants. Its recognition
is then even more difficult because it develops insidiously in previously
hypotonic patients who become more and more hypotonic and often dystonic (Dalla
Bernardina et al 1992). Thus, the overall picture is that of a progressive
disease and suggests an inborn error of metabolism; only close observation
combined with prolonged EEG-recording reveals the deterioration that results
from myoclonic status. Angelman syndrome and 4p-chromosomal aberration
(Sgro et al 1995) are the most frequently encountered causes of infantile myoclonic
status (Matsumoto et al 1992).
A previously normal five-year-old child developed nonfebrile generalized
tonic-clonic seizures that occurred repeatedly for a few weeks before massive
jerks, drop attacks, and brief episodes of atonic absences began. Six months
after the first drop attacks, the child’s parents noticed progressive
drooling, slowness, and unsteadiness, and the child became drowsy. Fine observation
disclosed erratic jerks affecting the mouth, tongue, fingers, and feet. The
high amplitude EEG was diffusely slow with frequent multifocal spikes. Night
recording disclosed a series of tonic seizures at the end of the night, between
5 o’clock
and 7 o'clock, with a vibratory component. This lasted for several months.
Language expression became slow and poor. At the end of myoclonic status, the
child was left, at the end of the night, with intractable tonic seizures as
the only seizure type. This is the usual presentation of a patient with myoclonic-astatic
epilepsy experiencing unfavorable outcome.
A four-year-old child who started
clonic (affecting both sides alternatively) polymorphic febrile and nonfebrile
seizures at the age of 5 months and exhibited myoclonus from the age of 3
years became drowsy with asynchronous jerks of the extremities and had drooling
and drowsiness. An EEG showed asynchronous generalized slow wave activity with
rare spikes. The status lasted for 5 days and improved progressively, but
the patient was left with worsened motor and cognitive condition. This is a
historical case of severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (Dravet syndrome).
A three-year-old child who had delayed motor milestones,
excellent eye contact with a round face, and ataxia, who never acquired the
ability to walk, and who exhibited major hypotonia became drowsy, drooled,
and had fine jerks of the extremities. This condition lasted a few weeks
before recovery and is characteristic of Angelman syndrome, a cause of myoclonic
epilepsy in nonprogressive encephalopathy (Dalla Bernardina et al 1992). Localization
Although myoclonic status clearly affects most of the brain cortex, myoclonus
indicates major involvement of the motor pathways. The predominance of jerks
in the extremities and facial muscles indicates that the pyramidal tract
is mostly affected. This location could be clearly demonstrated for Angelman
syndrome by means of back-averaging (Guerrini et al 1996). Although the same
investigation failed for severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy, similar clinical
expression suggests a similar location but a distinct mechanism.
Pathophysiology
The pathophysiology of myoclonic status remains unknown, and it may differ
in various conditions. Although Angelman syndrome has been shown to produce
cortical myoclonus (Guerrini et al 1996), this was not the case with other
conditions such as severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy.
Differential Diagnosis
Several conditions, both epileptic and nonepileptic, must be distinguished.
Frequent myoclonus may occur transiently in idiopathic generalized epilepsy,
the type of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy in which there is no deterioration
of consciousness and the EEG background remains normal.
Subcontinuous negative myoclonus may produce frequent jerks due to the ineffective
attempt to oppose gravity between the repeat episodes of loss of tone. However,
when the patient lies down, there is no jerk, and the motor phenomenon is purely
negative. The EEG shows continuous spike waves in slow sleep.
Frequent asymmetric
and asynchronous jerks with ataxia, with or without major mental deterioration,
are usual in the late course of the various types of progressive myoclonic
epilepsy (eg, Lafora body disease, ceroid-lipofuscinosis, Unverricht-Lundborg
disease, and mitochondrial encephalopathy).
Acute encephalopathy
following ischemia is an occasional condition in which nearly continuous
myoclonus appears several hours after cardiac arrest and lasts several days
(Young et al 1990).
Erratic myoclonus is combined with ataxia
and opsoclonus in infants with the opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome that is
due to nephroblastoma in half of the cases and whose cause remains unknown
in the other half. Although this is a nonepileptic condition, the distinction
may be difficult when patients have received steroid therapy or when the EEG
exhibits rhythmic slow wave activity because of drowsiness. Diagnostic Workup
The diagnosis is based on the clinical story and EEG. There is no specific
biochemical, radiological, or neurophysiological investigation to support
the diagnosis. The differential diagnosis depends on specific biochemical,
neurophysiological, and histological investigations.
Syndromes and Diseases in which the Seizure Type Occurs
Myoclonic status occurs in Dravet syndrome, myoclonic-astatic epilepsy, and
myoclonic epilepsy of nonprogressive encephalopathy.
Prognosis and Complications
The outcome depends on the etiology and the ability to control myoclonic status
since its duration is a major component of prognosis. Therapeutic strategies
also seem to play a role that could be of major importance (Perucca et al
1998). Drugs such as carbamazepine and vigabatrin may precipitate myoclonic
status due to myoclonic-astatic epilepsy (Dulac et al 1991; Kaminska et al
1999), and lamotrigine may precipitate myoclonic status due to Dravet syndrome
(Guerrini et al 1998).
Management
There is still no specific treatment for myoclonic status. Only prevention
based on appropriate early diagnosis and management of these patients is
useful. Valproate and lamotrigine may prevent or improve myoclonic status
due to myoclonic-astatic epilepsy (Dulac and Kaminska 1997), and the combination
of stiripentol (a nonapproved drug) with clobazam (also nonapproved in the
United States) and valproate may prevent myoclonic status in severe myoclonic
epilepsy in infancy (Chiron et al 2000). Benzodiazepines are only transiently
effective. Ketogenic diet proved to be useful at the beginning of status,
as soon as the parents notice some deterioration of psychomotor abilities
(Oguni et al 2002). For Angelman syndrome, piracetam is often useful (Guerrini
et al 1996).
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in infancy: a randomised placebo-controlled syndrome-dedicated trial. STICLO
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(‘myoclonic status’) in non-progressive encephalopathies. In: Roger
J, Bureau M, Dravet C, Dreifuss FE, Perret A, Wolf P. Epileptic syndromes in
infancy, childhood and adolescence. 2nd edition. London: John Libbey & Company
Ltd 1992, 89-96.
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petit mal. Clinical and genetic investigation. Neuropadiatrie 1970 2:59-78.
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myoclonic-astatic epilepsy of early childhood. Neuropediatrics 2002;33(3):122-32.
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worsening seizures. Epilepsia 1998;39:5-17.
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ILAE.
ILAE Copyright Notice
Major Keyword Descriptors
4p-syndrome
Angelman syndrome
epileptogenic encephalopathy
myoclonic astatic epilepsy
myoclonic epilepsy
Minor Keyword Descriptors
benzodiazepines
carbamazepine
idiopathic generalized epilepsy
ischemic-anoxic encephalopathy
lamotrigine
myoclonus
opsoclonus
valproate
vigabatrin
Age of Presentation
01-23 months
02-05 years
Age of Typical Presentation
01-23 months
02-05 years
Permuted Topics
Myoclonic status
Related Topics
Myoclonic status in nonprogressive encephalopathies
Progressive-myoclonic ataxias
Differential Diagnosis
idiopathic generalized epilepsy
subcontinuous negative myoclonus
progressive myoclonic epilepsy
Lafora body disease
ceroid-lipofuscinosis
Unverrich-Lundborg disease
mitochondrial encephalopathy
acute encephalopathy following ischemia
opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome
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